bobsledder
New member
I am looking for a used Yamaha sled with power steering for my special someone to ride. What are they called, when did they start making them and are they still in production? Thanks in advance, think snow!
I am looking for a used Yamaha sled with power steering for my special someone to ride. What are they called, when did they start making them and are they still in production? Thanks in advance, think snow!
I am looking for a used Yamaha sled with power steering for my special someone to ride. What are they called, when did they start making them and are they still in production? Thanks in advance, think snow!
I think many of the "toooo heavy" comments are way off base and are a reflection of the male perspective and riding style.
My partner will ride 250 mile days without a complaint.
for you "too heavy" parrots, read the wet weights listed in the latest AmSno mag.
uhm no....I wrote from experiences....I took one out in the wilderness to the yellow dog plains...to get there we took the Wilson truck trail to triple AAA road and on up....I floored it on sections of trail before we got there....when WOT it took off like a bat outta he!!....raised the skis up....then approaching 90 when you let off gas...and there were about 1 foot moguls....that thing was all over the place in the bumps and slowing down...very dangerous IMO...no way could a woman man handle the one I rode....but it had only single carbide which really suk....and man was it heavy....its all I could do to go down into a river bottom and WOT uphill and try to jump those boulders they put in line to block off fire roads....on the trail...it plain out wore me out.....albeit I was pushing it rather hard to see if I would like yamahaha again....nope...not even close....mileage is fantastic though...and going thru sand and no snow....it never overheated or anything which others did....but the minuses out weighed the pluses by about 5 to 1....better buy the used one from kip that way when and if she don't like it....you could sell it for aboot a 1000 less than you paid even after putting on some miles...good luck
To each his or her own. You are talking about a 10 grandish expenditure. Why not wait for snow and go to a dealer that sells both and let her ride one of each for a few miles. Then decide.I rode Polaris sleds for 22 years and switched to Yamahas and will probably never go back. The dependability is unmatched.Are they a little heavier ? Yes , but well worth it. She kept her Poo for 3 years to see how I liked Yamahas ,switched wife over to Viper last year and and she asked why didnt we switch her right away.We are trail riders , if I was a off trail rider and would agree Yamahas are a little too heavy for off trail.
uhm no....I wrote from experiences....I took one out in the wilderness to the yellow dog plains...to get there we took the Wilson truck trail to triple AAA road and on up....I floored it on sections of trail before we got there....when WOT it took off like a bat outta he!!....raised the skis up....then approaching 90 when you let off gas...and there were about 1 foot moguls....that thing was all over the place in the bumps and slowing down...very dangerous IMO...no way could a woman man handle the one I rode....but it had only single carbide which really suk....and man was it heavy....its all I could do to go down into a river bottom and WOT uphill and try to jump those boulders they put in line to block off fire roads....on the trail...it plain out wore me out.....albeit I was pushing it rather hard to see if I would like yamahaha again....nope...not even close....mileage is fantastic though...and going thru sand and no snow....it never overheated or anything which others did....but the minuses out weighed the pluses by about 5 to 1....better buy the used one from kip that way when and if she don't like it....you could sell it for aboot a 1000 less than you paid even after putting on some miles...good luck
Try to remember, the weight of the Yamaha sled created a "need" to add the power steering (and more weight). The other three manufacturers two stroke sleds are much lighter and do not need power steering.
Bear